Presentation of Can

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Transcript of Presentation of Can

Centrum für Angewandte Nanotechnologie (CAN) GmbH 1

• CAN GmbH – Center for Applied Nanotechnology GmbH

• Concepts from Science to Industry

• Dr. Frank Schröder-Oeynhausen

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 2

Nanotechnology

in Germany

Borstel:

Nanobiomedicine

Lübeck: UKSH

Lasercenter,

Nanobiomedicine

GKSS:

Membranes,

Nanomaterials TUHH:

Nanomaterials for

Transport Systems,

CNTs, Polymers, Fuel

Cell Systems

DESY:

Characterisation,

Dynamics on the

nanometer scale

EMBL:

Nanobiochemistry of

proteins

UKE, HPI:

Nanobiomedicine,

Molecular Imaging

BNI:

Nanobiomedicine

University HH:

Nanoparticle synthesis,

Nanomaterials,

Nanobiochemistry,

Energy Research,

Catalysis,

Nanostructures,

Nanoanalytics,

Nanodevices,

Theory of Nanosystems

huge

Medium

small

Activity:

CAN GmbH

Nanotechnology

in Hamburg

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Optically transparent

size 102

100

10-2

10-4

10-6

10-8

1 nm 1µm 1mm 1m

Surface to volume ratio

Nanotechnology

Properties

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 5

Our main expertise is on the production and

functionalization of nanoparticulate and nanocomposite

materials, encapsulation of active ingredients as well as

development of nanoparticle-based biological and

medical markers for the cosmetics-, consumables- and

pharma industry.

We produce nanoparticles of highest quality, offers

contract research and development services in the area of

nanotechnology and participates in national and

international research programs.

Mission: We offer nanoparticles for your purpose!

5 nm

Company Profile

Mission

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 6

Academia CAN GmbH Market

Science

Publications

Patents

Project Management

Standardization

Prototyping

Benchmarking

Products

Company Profile

General Conditions

Collaborative

Research

Own

Products

Contract

Research

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 7

Business Model: Public Private Partnership (PPP)

Founded: November 2005

Location: Hamburg

Staff: 25 + 6 (today)

Sales: 1.318.000 € (2009)

Partners: Verein zur Förderung der Nanotechnologie e.V. (65,2 %)

Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg (24,8 %)

University Hamburg (10 %)

Subsidiaries: Screening Port Hamburg GmbH. (80,2 %)

Head of Supervisory Board: Prof. Dr. Klaus-Peter Wittern

Chief Scientific Officer: Prof. Dr. Horst Weller

Chief Operation Officer: Dr. Frank Schröder-Oeynhausen

Company Profile

Concept

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 8

Fields of Business Transfer Model:

• I. Cosmetics / Flavours: Contract Research

Thickener, Emulsions, Encapsulation

• II. Medicine / Medical Technology:

Nanoparticles for Diagnostics Own Products

Drug Delivery Systems International Collaboration

Analytics / Toxicity Service Tox-Tests

Analyses of Nanostructures Service Analytics

Assay Development

• III. Technical Applications:

Security Labels Contract Research (conf.)

Nanostructured Functionalized Layers National Collaboration

Business Segments

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 9

Nanoparticles

• Synthesis of ZnO - and TiO2 - nanoparticles

• Modification of nanoparticles

Polymers

• Thickener für water- and oilbased systems

• Systems for hair-repair

• Emulsions

• Mucoadhesive polymers

Encapsulation

• Encapsulation of drugs and flavours

• Water/Oil - nanoemulsions

Contact:

Personal Care: Dr. Marcel Ruppert (ruppert@can-hamburg.de)

Hair Care: Dr. Marc Thiry (thiry@can-hamburg.de)

Contract

Research

Business Segment I: Cosmetics

5 nm

Ligands define stability and chemistry:

• Biocompatibility

• Coupling mechanisms

Core defines properties

depending on size:

• Colour

• Magnetism

• Conductivity

• Thermodynamics 5 nm

Nanoparticles: Properties

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Business Segment II: Medicine

• Fluorescent Nanoparticles

• Emission max: 500 to 620 nm

• High reproducible properties

• Soluble in water or non-polar organic

solvents

• High physical and chemical stability

12

Business Segment II: Medicine

Features

Structure

• CdSe/CdS/ZnS dots

• Core-shell-shell structure

• Scalable core size

• Core and core-shell particles available, too

Own

Product

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Nanoparticles: CANdot® Series A

18 Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

• Magnetic nanoparticles

• Diameter between 5 and 30 nm

• Small size distribution

• Soluble in water or non-polar, organic

solvents

• FeOX nanoparticles

• Hydrophobic acids for organic solvents

• Hydrophilic polymers for water

• Doping possible

magnet

Own

Product

Features

Structure

Business Segment II: Medicine

Nanoparticles: CANdot® Series M

A) Vapour Deposition (PVD / CVD)

B) Sol-Gel Technique

C) Wet-Chemistry

13 Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

“Hot Injection Process”

Advantages

• universal applicable

• well known

• broad temperature range

Disadvantages

• temperature profile hard to

control

• slow mixing after injection

• “up-scaling” difficult

Nanoparticles: Synthesis

Business Segment II: Medicine

14 Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

“Flow Synthesis”

Nanoparticles: Synthesis

Business Segment II: Medicine

A) Vapour Deposition (PVD / CVD)

B) Sol-Gel Technique

C) Wet-Chemistry

15 Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Nanoparticles: Synthesis

Business Segment II: Medicine

Nanoparticles: Properties

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Business Segment II: Medicine

5 nm

Service

Analytics

19 Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Toxicity of Nanoparticles

Business Segment II: Medicine

size

shape

shells

ligands

quality

skin

lung

intestine

ICC

nanoparticle modification interaction

20

Example for studying the interaction between nanoparticles and cell system

• Red: Epithelial-cells (lung), stained with Draq5 (nucleus)

• Blue: CdSe-CdS nanoparticles with different blockcopolymer-labels, located in the cell cytosol and the cell membrane

Contact:

Toxicity: Dr. Thomas Frahm (frahm@can-hamburg.de)

Toxicity of Nanoparticles

Business Segment II: Medicine

Service

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

• The goal of VIBRANT is the development of nano-

technology-based systems for diabetes diagnosis

and/or therapy. from the pharmaceutical industry.

• CAN and UHH will provide a contrast agent

providing a stable and high signal intensity, which is

highly specific to the cell type, but low toxicity,

EU project VIBRANT

Ihr Ansprechpartner:

Dr. Theo Schotten (schotten@can-hamburg.de)

http://www.fp7-vibrant.eu/ Ultimately, VIBRANT will deliver β-

cell specific, functionally optimized

nanoconstructs and defined know-how

for in vivo applications in non-human

primates and humans with regard to

quantification of BCM, imaging of

Centrum für Angewandte Nanotechnologie GmbH

Biocompatible Shell

~ 20 - 300 nm

Quantum Dots

Superparamagnetic particle

Ligand

Anchor/Linker

Micelle or Vesicle

The Nanocontainer Specific coupling agent

• EU Framework 7 Large Scale Project

• Idea and coordination: CAN GmbH

• Duration: 7/2009 to 6/2013

• Grant: 8 Mio EUR

• Scientists from nine research institutes from five EU-countries (Belgium, Spain, Denmark, Sweden and Germany

• Industrial Advisory Board: big pharma.

Outline

Ihr Ansprechpartner:

Dr. Theo Schotten (schotten@can-hamburg.de)

http://www.fp7-vibrant.eu/

International

collaboration

The “Axis of Excellence”*

*) R = 0.989! ;-)

International

collaboration

25

CANdots® Series X as Security Labels:

• Activation of the host lattice by doping with rare-earth elements

• Reproducible Shape of Particles (spheres to ellipsoids, synthesis specific)

• Reproducible Size of Particles (7 to 40 nm, material- and synthesis specific)

• Physical und Chemical Stability (photo stabilized, inert to high temperatures, acids, bases und

organic solvents)

Contact:

Polymers: Dr. Jan Niehaus (niehaus@can-hamburg.de)

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Security Labels

Business Segment III: Technical Applications

Contract

Research

(conf.)

Quantum Dot-

Carbon Nanotube

Composites

B.Hernandez-Juárez, C. Klinke, A.Kornowski, H. Weller

Institute of Physical Chemistry. Universität Hamburg.

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

New Concept of a Solar Cell

Business Segment III: Technical Applications

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

New Concept of a Solar Cell

Business Segment III: Technical Applications

+ -

CB

VB

e

e

e

e

e

h

e

conductive polymer

h+

e-

e.g. Photovoltaics Collaboration

with Academia

Centrum für Angewandte Nanotechnologie (CAN) GmbH 28

Example: VIBRANT, EU-Project

• EU Framework 7 – NMP – Large Scale Project

Nanosciences, Nanotechnologies, Materials and New

Production Technologies

• Goal of the project: Development of marker systems for diabetes diagnostics

• Coordination: CAN GmbH

• Timeframe: 7/2009 to 6/2013

• Budget: about 8 Mio EUR

• Scientists from nine research institutes from five EU-countries (Belgium, Spain, Denmark,

Sweden and Germany)

• Industrial Advisory Board

• Internet: www.fp7-vibrant.eu

• Coordination of the application process (two step process)

Collaborative Research Projects

Business Model:

Intellectual Property Rights owned by CAN

1. Method for producing alkaline earth sulfate nanoparticles (Basolute I)

2. Process for preparing dispersible sulfate nanoparticles (Basolute II)

3. Luminescent core/shell nanoparticles

4. Core/shell nanoparticles suitable for (F)RET-assays

5. Synthesis of nanoparticles comprising metal(III)vanadate

6. Security printing liquid and method using nanoparticles

7. Paramagnetic nanoparticles

8. Synthesis of nanoparticles (Dotnan)

9. X-Ray opaque dental nanomaterials

10. Postsynthetic polyacid/base modification of nanoparticles

11. InP nanoparticles and method for their manufacture

12. Reactor for the synthesis of nanoparticles

13. …

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 29

Patents, Products

Business Model:

CANdots Series A

CANdots Series X

Centrum für Angewandte Nanotechnologie (CAN) GmbH 30

First Contact

• Discussion on ideas / problems / requests

• Non Disclosure Agreement (NDA)

Concept

Agreement on:

• R&D goals

• Timeframe

• Budget

• Patent- and License issues

• Other partners

• Legal issues

Contracts

• Small jobs (< 10 T€)

• Feasibility Studies (< 50 T€)

• R&D Contracts (> 50 T€)

Contract Research

Business Model:

Consulting and Service

• Studies

• Surveys

CAN-Analytics

• Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM / TEM)

• Static and Dynamic Light Scattering (SLS / DLS)

• X-Rax Scattering (SAXS / WAXS)

• Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM)

• Infrared Spectroscopy

• Mass-Spectrometry (MS, MALDI-MS)

• Absorption Spectroscopy (UV-Vis, NIR)

• Fluorescence Optical Microscopy

• Confocal Laser-Scanning Microscopy

• Electron Spin Resonance-Spectroscopy

• SQUID Magnetometry

• Chromatography

• Rheology

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 31

Service

Business Model:

University of Hamburg

Cooperation Contracts

Companies:

Beiersdorf AG www.beiersdorf.com

Eppendorf AG www.eppendorf.com

BODE Chemie GmbH www.bode-chemie.de

Merck KGaA www.merck.de

Bayer AG www.bayer.de

Institutions:

Free and Hansestadt Hamburg http://fhh.hamburg.de/

Hamburger Sparkasse www.haspa.de

Hamburg Chamber of Commerce www.hk24.de

Innovationsstiftung Hamburg www.innovationsstiftung.de

Life Science Agentur Norgenta www.norgenta.de

Center of Competence Hansenanotec www.nanoscience.de/hansenanotec/

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 32

Partner

CAN GmbH:

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH 33

www.can-hamburg.de

Center for Applied Nanotechnology (CAN) GmbH

Grindelallee 117

20146 Hamburg

Germany

T +49 40 42838 – 4983

F +49 40 42838 – 5797

E fso@can-hamburg.de

… get in contact !

CAN GmbH: